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Robert Daniel Didier (born February 16, 1949 in Hattiesburg, Mississippi) is a former catcher in Major League Baseball who played for three different teams between 1969 and 1974. Listed at 6' 0", 190 lb., he was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed. Didier was a talented catcher whose promising career was cut short by a litany of injuries. He entered the majors in 1969 with the Atlanta Braves, playing for them four years before joining the Detroit Tigers (1973) and Boston Red Sox (1974). In his rookie season, Didier appeared in a career-high 114 games helping his team to reach the National League West Division title. At the end of the season, he finished fourth in the Rookie of the Year vote (behind Ted Sizemore, Coco Laboy and Al Oliver and over Larry Hisle) and also was named to the Topps All-Star Rookie Roster. After that, he suffered arm and back problems and played only in 133 games for the next five seasons. While in Atlanta, he became the preferred catcher of knuckleballer Phil Niekro. In a six-season career, Didier was a .229 hitter (172-for-751) with 32 RBI and 32 runs without home runs. As a catcher, he collected 1276 outs, 119 assists, and committed only nine errors in 1404 chances, for a solid .994 fielding percentage. Following his playing retirement, Didier managed in the minor leagues for the Tigers, White Sox, Dodgers and Cubs organizations. In the majors, he has coached for the Athletics and Mariners, and also has worked as a catching coordinator in the Arizona Diamondbacks system. In 2007 Didier was part of the coaching staff at Major League Baseball's Academy in Tirrenia, Italy. The academy, for 55 elite players from 17 countries in Europe and Africa, was held from August 9 through August 30. The players were chosen by major league scouts at tryouts in Europe during the month of April. Didier joined Chinese Olympic team manager Jim Lefebvre as well former major leaguers Barry Larkin, Bruce Hurst, Lee Smith and John Cangelosi. He is currently the manager of the Yakima Bears. [edit] See also[edit] SourcesCategories: Atlanta Braves players | Boston Red Sox players | Detroit Tigers players | Major League Baseball catchers | Minor league baseball managers | Major League Baseball third base coaches | Oakland Athletics coaches | Seattle Mariners coaches | Major League Baseball players from Mississippi | 1949 births | Living people |
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